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BIBLIOGRAPHY 



Alperin, I. M. and R. H. Schaeffer. 1965. Marine fishes new or uncom- 

 mon to Long Island. New York Fish and Game Jour. 12:1-16. 



Amish, R. 1974. Preliminary assessment of the winter flounder, Pseudo- 

 pleuronectes americanus population on Herod Point Shoal, Shoreham, 

 Long Island with emphasis on reproduction. IN: Volume IV of the 

 preoperational ecological monitoring program of the marine environs 

 at LILCO Nuclear Power Generating Facility, Shoreham, Long Island, 

 N.Y. 5 sections. 



Evaluated the utilization of Herod Point Shoal as a winter flounder 

 spawning or nursery area through measurement of indirect parameters 

 such as occurrence, gonadal development and larval abundance. 



Army Corps of Engineers. 1972. New Haven Harbor, Connecticut Maint- 

 enance Dredging. 



Determined zinc, lead and copper content and chemical oxygen demand 

 of dredge spoil. Alternatives for dredge spoil are discussed. 



1973a. Final environmental statement: New Haven Harbor, 



Connecticut Maintenance Dredging. 171 pp and appendices. 



A consideration of the suitability of the New Haven Dump Grounds as 

 a regional dredge disposal site for central and western Long Island 

 Sound . 



1973b. Environmental statement. Coke Works Electric Generating 



Plant, New Haven Harbor, Connecticut. 



Austin, H. , M. Dickinson and C. Hickey. 1973. An ecological study of 

 the ichthyofauna at the Northport power station, Long Island, New 

 York prepared for LILCO by the Fisheries Oceanography Department of 

 the New York Ocean Science Laboratory (NYOSL) . 248 pp. 



Ichthyoplankton data presented biweekly as the number of eggs and 

 larvae per unit volume from surface and bottom tows, and egg-size 

 by species. Adult fish-impingement data were presented as biomass 

 and summary of the number of individuals impinged. Fishes from 

 trawls, gills and seines were sexed, weighed, measured (measures 

 and ranges presented) , and stomach contents described. Fish results 

 presented by species with information on distribution, brood habits 

 and reproductive cycle. Zooplankton data included seasonal esti- 

 mates of biomass along with species composition for copepods . 



